4.5 Article

Sea surface CO2 fugacity in the southwestern South Atlantic Ocean: An evaluation based on satellite-derived images

期刊

MARINE CHEMISTRY
卷 236, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.marchem.2021.104020

关键词

Carbon dioxide; Carbonate system variables; Modeled fCO(2); fCO(2) drivers; South Brazil Bight; Southern Brazilian Shelf; Abrolhos-Campos Region

资金

  1. Brazilian National Council on Research and Development (CNPq) [558267/20092, 445506/2014-8, 304937/2018-5, 381207/2011-0]
  2. Foundation of Research Support to the State of Rio Grande do Sul (FAPERGS) [2075-2551/13-7]
  3. Higher Education Personnel Improvement Coordination (CAPES) [23038.001421/2014-30, 23038.013648/2018-51, 88881.195000/2018-01, 88887.360799/2019-00]
  4. Brazilian Ministry of Science, Technology, and Innovation (MCTI)
  5. Brazilian Navy

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study developed seasonal algorithms to investigate CO2 dynamics in the southwestern South Atlantic Ocean during different seasons. The results showed that sea surface temperature was the main driver of seasonal changes in sea surface CO2 fugacity, with total dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity changes also playing significant roles in certain regions. The use of satellite-derived images was highlighted as a powerful tool to enhance understanding of biogeochemical processes in relatively undersampled ocean regions.
The South Atlantic Ocean is historically less sampled than the North Atlantic Ocean. Recent efforts have improved our understanding of the carbonate system variable distribution, mainly on sea surface CO2 fugacity (fCO(2)). However, these studies have been regionally and temporally restricted. Hence, in this research we developed seasonal algorithms of sea surface fCO(2) to investigate the CO2 dynamics along the southwestern South Atlantic Ocean during spring-summer and fall-winter periods. The studied region includes the continental shelf areas of the Abrolhos-Campos Region (an area under the influence of central water upwelling), the South Brazil Bight (a large embayment affected by the mesoscale variability in a westward boundary current), the Southern Brazilian Shelf (a coastal zone influenced by freshwater discharge from continent and water mass entrainment), and offshore waters in the open ocean domain of the southwestern South Atlantic Ocean. Monthly satellite images of sea surface temperature, salinity, and chlorophyll-a, which were concomitantly available from August 2011 to June 2015, were used to reconstruct and evaluate the sea surface fCO(2) seasonal field. The predicted fields of sea surface fCO(2) enabled an investigation of the main drivers that change this variable over the distinct biogeochemical provinces in the region. As expected, the sea surface temperature was the main driver of seasonal changes in sea surface fCO(2) , but total dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity changes were also relevant, mainly in the biogeochemical provinces under the influence of continental freshwater input or central water upwelling. The latter can play an unpredictable role in CO2 dynamics due to nutrient- and DIC-rich water transport close to the surface. Finally, the use of satellite-derived images is a powerful tool to increase biogeochemical knowledge of relatively undersampled ocean regions, while the development of seasonal sea surface fCO(2) algorithms allows a better spatiotemporal comprehension of the CO2 distribution, dynamics, and drivers in the southwestern South Atlantic Ocean - a key region for improving the understanding of the global carbon cycle.

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